Policy Proposal
The Affordability and Immigration Act of 2026
A comprehensive policy proposal to restore housing affordability, protect wages, and align population growth with economic capacity.
The Core Problem
Housing costs have outpaced wages for decades. The causes are structural: too much demand chasing too little supply, compounded by policy failures across immigration, foreign investment, corporate consolidation, and local zoning.
No single reform addresses these issues. The Affordability and Immigration Act of 2026 proposes structural changes across five policy areas.
Five Clear Reforms
End Corporate Ownership of Single-Family Homes
Corporations cannot own single-family homes and must divest to owner-occupants within 2 years.
Reduce Immigration by 90% for 10 Years
A 10-year pause to let housing supply catch up with population growth.
End H-1B Visa Program, Restore H-1
Eliminate outsourcing loopholes. Require direct employment at market wages.
End Foreign Ownership of Residential Property
Home ownership must require at least a Green Card.
Increase Housing Construction
Federal-local partnerships to build more homes across the country.
Expected Outcomes
- -Increased availability of entry-level homes for working families
- -Reduced investor-driven and foreign-buyer price floors
- -Slower rent growth in high-pressure markets
- -Improved wage leverage for domestic workers
- -Higher homeownership rates among median-income households
Read the Act
Explore the detailed policy proposals, implementation mechanisms, and projected outcomes.